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3-letter words containing pl

  • apl — a high-level computer language employing a large number of special symbols, used esp. in mathematical applications
  • bpl — birthplace
  • cpl — Combined Programming Language. U Cambridge and U London. A very complex language, syntactically based on ALGOL 60, with a pure functional subset. Provides the ..where.. form of local definitions. Strongly typed but has a "general" type enabling a weak form of polymorphism. Functions may be defined as either normal or applicative order. Typed array and polymorphic list structures. List selection is through structure matching. Partially implemented on the Titan (Atlas 2) computer at Cambridge. Led to the much simpler BCPL. "The Main Features of CPL", D.W. Barron et al, Computer J 6(2):134-143 (Jul 1963).
  • dpl — DECmmp Parallel Language. A C-like parallel language for the DECmpp machine.
  • epl — 1. Early PL/I. 2. Experimental Programming Language. 3. Eden Programming Language. 4. Equational Programming Language 5. Ethernet Private Line
  • gpl — 1. General Purpose Language. 2. ["A Sample Management Application Program in a Graphical Data-driven Programming language", A.L. Davis et al, Digest of Papers, Compcon Spring 81, Feb 1981, pp. 162-167]. 3. Genken Programming Language. 4. General Public License.
  • hpl — Language used in HP9825A/S/T "Desktop Calculators", 1978(?) and ported to the early Series 200 family (9826 and 9836, 68000). Fairly simple and standard, but with extensive I/O support for data acquisition and control (BCD, Serial, 16 bit custom and IEEE 488 interfaces), including interrupt handling. Currently owned by Structured Software Systems. "HPL Operating Manual for Series 200, Models 216, 226 and 235\6", HP 98614-90010, Jan 1984.
  • ipl — 1. Information Processing Language. 2. Internet Public Library. 3. Initial Program Load. 4. Initial Program Loader.
  • jpl — (language)   JAM Programming Language.
  • lpl — List Programming Language. LISP-like language with ALGOL-like syntax, for IBM 360. "LPL - LISP Programming Language", F.W. Blair et al, RC 3062, IBM TJWRC, Sep 1970.
  • mpl — 1.   (language)   An early possible name for PL/I. 2. MasPar data-parallel version of C. See also ampl. 3. Motorola Programming Language. A low-level PL/I-like language, similar to PL/M, but for the Motorola 6800. 4. MicroProgramming Language. Simple language for microprogramming. Statements on the same line represent register transfers caused by one microinstruction, and are executed in parallel.
  • npl — (in the UK) National Physical Laboratory.
  • pl1 — (spelling)   It's spelled "PL/I".
  • pla — (language, music)   A high-level music programming language, written in SAIL. Pla includes concurrency based on message passing.
  • plc — Programmable Logic Controller
  • plo — Palestine Liberation Organization
  • plp — Parliamentary Labour Party
  • plr — Public Lending Right
  • pls — Pls is a written abbreviation for please.
  • plu — a beaver skin, especially one of prime quality.
  • ply — British Dialect. to bend, fold, or mold.
  • ppl — Polymorphic Programming Language. An interactive, extensible language, based on APL, from Harvard University.
  • rpl — Reverse Polish LISP. Language used by HP-28 and HP-48 calculators.
  • spl — 1. Synchronous Programming Language. A DSP language. "Introduction to the SPL Compiler", Computalker Consultants, 1986. 2. Space Programming Language. Realtime language used by the US Air Force for aerospace software. Aka SPL/J6. Similar to JOVIAL. "Space Programming Language Development", SAMSO TP 70-325, System Development Corp (Sep 1970). (See CLASP). 3. System Programming Language. HP, 1977. An ALGOL-like language for the HP3000 computer allowing inline assembly code. MPE, the OS for the HP3000 was written in SPL. Pub.No.30000-90024, HP. See also SPLash!. 4. Systems Programming Language. PRIME Computer, 80's. A variant of PL/I used on PRIME computers. PL/I subset G, less I/O plus a few extensions. SPL User's Reference Guide, Prime. (See PL/P.) 5. Systems Programming Language. A PL/I subset/extension for the P1000. D.B. Wortman, U Toronto. Philips Data Sys, Netherlands, 1971. Symbolic constants, pointer arithmetic, inline assembly code. Used to implement compilers, operating systems, and database. 6. Student Programming Language. A translator-interpreter for a dialect of PL/I. 7. Set Priority Level
  • tpl — 1. Table Producing Language. "The Bureau of Labor Statistics Table Producing Language (TPL)", R.C. Mendelssohn, Proc ACM Annual Conf (1974). 2. Fleming Nielson. A concurrent functional language. 3. Terminal Programming Language. Texas Inst, late 70's. Used on the TI-990/1 Small Business Computer and the TI-771 Intelligent Terminal.
  • vpl — 1. visual programming language. 2. A dataflow language for interactive image processing.
  • xpl — A small dialect of PL/I used for compiler writing from Stanford, 1967-69. XPL has one-dimensional arrays. I/O is achieved with character pseudo-variable INPUT and OUTPUT, e.g. OUTPUT = 'This is a line'; It has inline machine code. "Programmers are given all the rope they ask for. Novices tend to hang themselves fairly frequently." XPL has been implemented on IBM 360, Univac 1100, ICL System 4, CDC 6000 and Cyber series, XDS Sigma-5 and Sigma-7 and DEC PDP-10. An optimising XPL compiler (version 1) by Robin Vowels <[email protected]> is a standard implementation of XPL and is based on McKeeman, Horning, and Wortman's improved XCOM (which employs hashed symbol table generation). It includes the extra built-in function COREHALFWORD. The following areas have been optimised: procedures calls when the argument and corresponding parameter are of the same type, and when the argument is a constant; constant subscripts; use of CORELHALFWORD and COREWORD; string constants of length one; iterative DO statements by transferring code to the end of the loop. String constants of length one do not require a descriptor, hence more descriptors are available for string variables. Comparison operations are treated as commutative, and an improved Commute algorithm is used. Halfword instructions are generated for BIT(16) variables. These areas have been improved or re-written: calls on OUTPUT, catenation, integer-to-string conversion, multiply, divide, and MOD. An emitter for SS-type instructions has been added. The compiler achieves an 11% reduction in object code compiling itself, an 11% increase in compilation rate, a 55% increase in compilation speed when the $E toggle is set. Special treatment for catenating a string to an integer substantially decreases consumption of the free string area, and decreases string moves. The latter improvement is most noticeable on small core machines. Core requirements: less than the improved XCOM on which it is based (approx. 98000 bytes). Symbol table size is 468. Ported to IBM System 370. The compiler is written in XPL. The code generators are machine-specific.

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